Claim No: IL-2025-000064 - [2025] EWHC 2545 (Ch)
Chancery Division of the High Court

Claim No: IL-2025-000064 - [2025] EWHC 2545 (Ch)

Fecha: 06-Oct-2025

The decision tells the court nothing about whether or not expert evidence should be ordered in a case governed by the Civil Procedure Rules. That case involved an arbitration. Mr Craig KC rightly says

The decision tells the court nothing about whether or not expert evidence should be ordered in a case governed by the Civil Procedure Rules. That case involved an arbitration. Mr Craig KC rightly says that AlphaSharp says nothing of assistance. It was a case in which the court dismissed a summary judgment application and said, in that context, that it could not be ruled out that there could be some material expert evidence adduced at trial. And quite apart from the fact that the expert evidence in Henderson was different - it was a software engineering expert – Mr Craig KC observes that it reflected the agreement of the parties, and related to a completely different issue: see paragraph 235 of the judgment. Indeed, looking at paragraph 236, it would appear that the parties had agreed to a provision in a consent order of Cockerill J, which had varied an earlier order of Dias J, by providing that software engineering expert evidence would be limited to two remaining issues.

Expert evidence: Submissions, analysis and conclusions

60.

As with Ms Goodman’s recently received further submissions on disclosure, I consider that I should have regard to her further written submissions on the expert evidence, and for the same reasons.

61.

In her initial written submissions, Ms Goodman explains that the defendant considers that this is a case in which expert evidence is plainly necessary. The reasons are set out in Mr Sheikh’s first witness statement, served in support of the expert evidence application. The defendant has proposed five ‘expert evidence issues’ as follows:

(1)

Stages in trading strategy development;

(2)

Public domain assessment;

(3)

Valuation of confidential information;

(4)

Retention of value; and